2010
DOI: 10.1596/978-0-8213-8580-7
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Innovations in Land Rights Recognition, Administration, and Governance

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Cited by 37 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…From the academic perspective, with the creation of the framework, we operationalised the seven FFP elements within five key governance dimensions. The introduction of these dimensions aligns our framework with other relevant governance literature (Alemie et al, 2015;Bevir, 2009;Deininger et al, 2010;Edelenbos and Van Meerkerk, 2016;Goodwin and Painter, 1996;Hirst, 2000;Jessop, 1997;Klijn, 2008;Kooiman, 1993;Osborne, 2010;Rhodes, 1996;Saito, 2008;Van Kersbergen and Van Waarden, 2004). From practical perspective, the FGAF helps to identify the challenges of the governance context when implementing a new technology and it provides recommendations for interventions to increase the governance context support.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 60%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…From the academic perspective, with the creation of the framework, we operationalised the seven FFP elements within five key governance dimensions. The introduction of these dimensions aligns our framework with other relevant governance literature (Alemie et al, 2015;Bevir, 2009;Deininger et al, 2010;Edelenbos and Van Meerkerk, 2016;Goodwin and Painter, 1996;Hirst, 2000;Jessop, 1997;Klijn, 2008;Kooiman, 1993;Osborne, 2010;Rhodes, 1996;Saito, 2008;Van Kersbergen and Van Waarden, 2004). From practical perspective, the FGAF helps to identify the challenges of the governance context when implementing a new technology and it provides recommendations for interventions to increase the governance context support.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 60%
“…The central government is divided into four provinces, 30 districts, which are subdivided into 416 sectors and then in 2146 cells. Within these cells, there are 14,876 villages which are the smallest unit (Deininger et al, 2010;Ngoga et al, 2017). The district land offices are supported by both land managers at the sector level and cell land committees that operate at the lower administrative level (Ngoga et al, 2017).…”
Section: Musanze District Rwanda As a Case Studymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Different authors have proposed various formulations but typically mention management (the right to regulate use and to transform the resource), exclusion (the right to determine who has use rights), and alienation (the right to sell, lease, or otherwise dispose of other rights) among these second-order rights. Different individuals, communities, or institutions may each hold different bundles of rights over the same space (Sikor et al 2017;Deininger et al 2010). Conceiving property rights in terms of overlapping layers of diverse bundles can help avoid the misleading oversimplification of the big four typology and enables a more nuanced analysis of the complexities and variations in how property regimes can be arranged (von Benda-Beckmann et al 2006).…”
Section: Conceptual Models Of Tenure and Their Applicability In Pasto...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The big four typology implies that land should either be under private tenure, state tenure, or communal tenure and that for communal tenure, each community parcel or territory should have a clear, community holder of those rights-an owner. In many customary systems, however, because rights are layered in different bundles, no single rights-holder can legitimately claim to be the full owner of a land parcel (Deininger et al 2010).…”
Section: Conceptual Models Of Tenure and Their Applicability In Pasto...mentioning
confidence: 99%